From couture fashion to opulent perfumes and decadent food, the luxury
goods and services industry has grown at an unprecedented rate even in
the context of a global recession. But in contemporary digital culture
does luxury still reside in material things, or rather the look of
things? In this first study of luxury through the lens of visual
culture, Armitage argues that luxury is undergoing a shift from material
culture to the immaterial culture of the visual, offering new forms of
luxury engagement and unparalleled levels of pleasure never before
offered to the senses.
Calling for a new understanding of luxury in the changing visual
landscape of contemporary society, Luxury and Visual Culture embraces
an extraordinary range of cultural forms, including fashion,
photography, social media, television, and art. From the masterpieces of
Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons, to Richard Avedon's photography and Louis
Vuitton's Flagship stores, the book explores key issues of
globalization, digitization, consumer identity, "mass" luxury, and the
role of art. This text is ideal for all students of contemporary luxury
studies, as well as scholars and researchers in the field of visual
culture.